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9- pcinocrrtt. PUpLISIIED EVERY WEDNESDAY MORNING, T1211.MS :—$2.50 per annum in advance. Advertisements. One Square, fiivt insertion $1.50 One Square, second insertion .... 1.00 Every subsequent insertion 50 Contract Advertismcnts inserted upon the most Reasonable Term'*. Marriage Notices and Obituaries not exceeding ^rihies, inserted free. ter All communications intended for publica tion in t'ne Darlington Democrat, must be ad dressed to the Proprietor. HEALTH! BEAUTY!! Sirong, Pore and Rich Clood—In crease of Flesh and Weight—Clear Skin and Bcautifcl Complexion, SECCRED to ALL. ^ADWAY’S Sarsaparillian Eesolvent HAS MADE THE MO-*T ASTONISHING CURES. 50 QUICK. SO ItAPlD ARK THE CHANGES, THE BODY UN DEROOKS UNDER THE INEI.U- ICNCfi OF THIS TRULY WONDERKTfL MEDI- CiNK THAT Evory Day an Inoraate in Flesh and Weight la Seen and Felt. Scrofula,Consnmpt Ion, Sy phllls.uncnrefl • ml badly treated Venereal, in fie many fort*.*, Glandfiiar eliitraMe, Ulcers In tbe r riir«*af t Tumors, Nodes in tlio .Cilands, and other phrts of the system, £«»re Kres, At ruinous discharges from tlie Kars, Kruptlx'c diseases of the ftyes. Nose, JHoutH, and the worst forms of Skin din* eases. Rrupfftoiis, Fever Eores, Scald Head, li-lug Worm, S<%lt Hheuui, Krysipelas, Acne, Ulack Spots, Worms In the Flesh, Tumors. Cancers lu the Womb, and all weakening and painful discharges, Night Aweuts, !o»s of sperm and all wastes of the life principle, are within tlie curative range of Radway’s Sarsaparillian Resol vent, and a few days use will prove'to any 1>rr»ou using It for either of these forms of disease, ns potent power to cure them. Not oitiy docs the Sa< sn parillian ttesolvent excel si! knovu reined ul agents, in tnc care Chronic, Itciofulous Con-tit udonal. ^kinKtid SypUil^il disc*sc« but it is the <»niy podt ve remedy fc>r li.i(|ncy, Hladder Urinary, and W'ouib diseases, (.'ravel. Illr- bstes Dropsy, St<»p4>age of Water, lucon- t.iiiei»ce of tirioe, IS right's disease. Album inuria, and in all cases where there are Uric a dust deposits, or the tvater I* t hftclt, cloudy, mixed with subitances like tlie white of an egg, or llireo^ls like, while silk, or there Is a tuorbid dark, bilious appear- .ance, anti white bone dust deposits, and "Where there i« a prlekiug, Imrntng sensa tion when passing wafer, and pain iu the Kmall of the Rack- and nlnng fhe Loins. In all these conditions Hailway’* >arsuparll- liau Itesol vent aided by the application of JCariwa) ’* KeatSy Relief to the apine an I Mmail of the liurk. and the Rowrls regula ted w it h one or t wo of i&udwuy’s Regulat ing Fills per day. -vlll soon make u Coi..- filete cure. In a fe%v days, the patient will be enabled »o hold and discharge Uis water naturally without pn in, a ml the Urine will be restorod to Us natural ciuar, and amber or sherry color. THE WASTES OF THE BODY ars supplied aith a<'v, healthy, and vigorous Wood, that funushes sound struirimv. 'llcTice- sll siifhaing: from Waxxrxi.NO DiscHAr.oxs, eithtr MALE or FEMALE, «flhs Womb, Uterus, or other erfms, whether Leucor- rhoea. Sperm, or Erupt!re discii.irgc.-i, of every kind, or froti rtoisnee of “ 8e!r-ahuse. M from the Genital Glands, oi Venereal di.ichsrgc?, or ulcers, or Bore.-', through the reparative procLHS of RADWAY 8 8A IC-AI'A KIL- J.j AN, are arresuid, and the ruptured organs healed THE TRUK THEORY <»F CURE. HAD WAY'8 cAItSAJ'AI! 1LLIAN RESOLVENT supp ton fhe .-vaMm, tlirough the blood, utiuc, sweat, and S! :'..<;tur<.—m «.;.Lx com.mu-nfe with Tissue making, i-'icth makiu:. Heat or Caloric and Fat miking eiC-mcnts. All oi its coustittieutf nre n'writhing, purifying, anti .M re-t’jiheiiivg. It Repairs, litas. Resolves, and drives on.' oj t.'t< body the products of Di-cay and CorrunlioB. CO .sU.vli'TD»>' f WillFK SWELLING, DiiuFSY, »Y fill US, CANCERS, TUMORS Ac., are all of a a'ToIuioiui diathesis, and sn h, art wiihin ♦he curative range of the kAlts A1*A UlLLlAN RESOLVENT! i That Scr-ifula, by whatever name designated, is 'the re«.iir of de|HMtts iron: the blood, induced or caused by Chrouie iiid.uuation. That tho.^e dcpo^itit take place vh-n thj b ood is ;> w «r, ualerg, and incapable of Rojit in xotution its proper -- r—~ *».« lub«-o- e •»«* t» •‘-•on in th- blood, ni Mcr- cury, t.’^oinei, Cotr-wive Sublimate, which is the Corro sive Cnloridc ot Metvurv or other agents, given in modi- 'Ciacs sad enter lur^ -ly in the common ndverttsod Ksra-vian!:.’*, N »l ABSGRliED OR CHANGED FROM THE!it N ATUB vL CONDITION. 2. Thi.t unlvss the repairs or nutriments nr*» gi'eater than the wa-f _•#, th«t doooiti'-uiUvtn and dec»ty will so- Jx'-i venr, an i tne powers of life b^-xime exhausted. 3. Th.'* the dy'nj body cannot he iiu^tAine.l on any < remm :it o*’ tne«i teat ion* that exhaudsthe svlitem, orlniu -to aouruh tho b<ool, the only medium tniough which th* ri’al fi»rres ar*-' preserved, uni on which the s-.owih d ‘.he Ijo ly dep.-n is. 4. Tliat Ilatlway's Snrsaparllllan Res- •1 rent supplies a want never before t>o^scs^ed or known ■to cxi«t in m-<liciue, that this new found principle in Chemical science, which has been brought to suclt a per fect system of cure ia exhibited os follows : 1. Its great power in as amilating the food in its first ata-e of distillation in the pi- of digestion, as chyme •ad chyle with tho nouihnmg elements of blood, ncpcratiiig from the** liquids refuse sud inert qual ities before they are taken up by the lactccals ana ars formed into blood. Here we soe that by its wonderful power it charges the system with tnc very essence of principle that forms the"vita! powers of the body, and its chemical action ou the blood in its primitive and com plete (ondition, scr.iratescvuy atom of refuse xnatoi ial or e emcat, oat of which the virus ot disease is formed. 2. 'That, the blood thus prepared, and supplied with these nourishing properties becomes strong, rich and healthy, end holds in solution its proper constituents, through the Sarsaparillian licsolvent, and repairs the wastes of the bod v with sound and healthy structures. Such is tho wonderful power tbe Sarsa- jMsrillian Resolvent exerts on the blood and juices of tLr syotem, that no virulent humors or poi sons will exist by which deposits aro made. 5. The rapidity which the SarsapariUlan enters the circulation, and communicates its curative powers through tho Blood, Sw< at, Uriue, and other fluids, se cures the constituent se retions of each respective organ, establishing functional harmony throughout the system; throuph its action and power over tne Secretion*, the Lirer secretes its naturalproper allotment of bi o; the 8.<in sweat; tho Ku u. vs urc.r; and tlie Lungs carbon; so that this wondt iful medicine not only «?tnb- ishes health in the sick b-' •. but prewirvcs tho system in hiuvlth. As wc have shown the principle on which disease is formed, as well us tho only sensible theory of cure, we claim'that the range of cure of the ^arsapnrll- lia«t Resolvent i« uulim tid, and th.it every iiiseane that is of a C*iroiiio,8ci-ofu;otw or Organic Diathesis, is, properiy within its si o i*l tauge. THE GREAT SECRET OF CURE in this Mtdicine c-)u-.t»ts in tlie selection of ingredient! containing curative ua-i nour.Khing properties that sup ply the blood and general system with rnoh constituent! which, inn con-lit.on of disease and depravity, it is defi cient of, t-'^ether with tlie combination of the several ingib lients tluii form tbe 8ARBAFAUILLIAN RESOL- VENT. It the constituent of Oxygen was exhausted from the atmospheric air y .itfe would become extinct. So, when tho blood becomes exhausted of its vital constituents, it ieposi:* Us tubercles and diseased humors in the body, *ni the element* of decay and decomposition supervene. Had way's Snmapn rilllmt Resolvent it to the blood and general system what Oxtoxn is to the atmospheric air; it suj plios the life principle, and enables the LIo jU to h jld in solution all its natural con- atituents. DAILY CHANGUS tike plxce, far as the Sarsapxrii'ian iaeroa^e^ *he strength fcnd pur-ty of ti*e birw^d, ail dfpo-.it> ar- ditniniHhed, ;tnd ■where tbero are tubercles f >rnK i ia the lun^s, ,ha fii.-thsr >Jt-po-^tM are anomie l and those that aro esiub- dished or terming didi^ig.d, ex.C. i, exaaust.-d, or the portion of the di>*a‘od itmg cieatri-sed, and th-* comnimp- -tive, sc-roiulous “• '-ject lO-eiveS goed, if not souuJ, health. ) LIND LADY CURED. Grav.d, Dy*i»<-p.ia, Bore Legs Bkeling from the Lung>, <:.ir»-a. Mr. Geoiick MonriMiu, a commereial traveller, in Canada West, wtites us, under date of April 17, 1309, from WopdsUxik : •* The 8a USAFAUILLT AN RI'.SOLVENT Is in Fenian.L, and working wond *.:,. Mr. lloxo. of Strati' ds« ville. mutvh.mt, t»lfi me of a •m-.c- where a woman WAS DLINI), hut, by the use oftaeBAkSAPARlLLlAN llii- U0LVENT, c.m now see to n. >d Bhc would give a certificate, but d>>os not wish to be t*othei< 1 with p *ople ■wrU.rtg. Huodtcds call to soe h r. The cure is regarded as wonderful. “Mctwrs. VY'bitb & Scott, principal druggists he:e, Inform ra • of a person of note —nigh social stm-iing -who ■for jears was afUhficd with DYSt’iil’SlA nn l Git K VEL, who has beer, entirely cured by RAD WAY 8 8A K8A- PARILL!AN UtkiOLVE.VT.’* Mr. H»'*ao rcMifs another case of Chronic Sore Lug, that rxsifteU all other »/]vert»*e : menkine-t, cured by & 1 w bottler of SAltSATARI LLl AN RESOLVENT. “Mr. Joatha.v FaaKuaaD, of bidder Station, c.urod, by one bottle, of Bleeding from the Lungs Nipht bwcats, •Threatened CcnMimptu n. “ In every town 1 visit I henrof wonderful cures by -the BARS A FA KILLIAN RK80LVENT. F-r every kind of liumur, Bore, Skin Eruption, and nli w /utciunr <lischargcs, the people use it, ai'd beounie cured ; t** w‘ Pita, Scrofuia, V’litte Swelling, Sor* Head* au-i Ky Nose and Mouth, all kinds of Sore*, this w >udet remedy acts s>i )>owerfully on the blood that all who take it become strong, iwund, and ** GEf>. G. MORTIMER, “Commercial Traveller.' BY A. P. LUCAS, ••Man’s noblest mission to advance, His woes assail, his weal enhance. His rights enforce, his wrongs redress $2-50 ^ZSTlsrXTlKA- DEVOTED TO LITERATURE, AGRICULTURE, MORALITY, GENERAL INETLLIGENCE AND INDUSTRIAL IMPROVEMENTS. VOLUME 2. DARLINGTON, S. C., WEDNESDAY MORNING, JUNE 1, 1870. NO. 31 Jtodn). THJB I-OVJED NOT BT JOHN O. WHITTIER. How strange it seems, with so much gone Of life and lore, to still lire on ! Ah, brother, only I and thou Are left of all that circle now— The dear home faces whereupon That fitful firelight paled and shone. Henceforward, listen as we will. The voices of that hearth are still; Look where wo ma; (he wild world o’er Those lighted faces shine no more. We tread tlie path their foot havyrorn, We sit beneath their orchard trees. We hear them like the hum of bees And rustle of the bladed corn; We turn tbe pages that they read, Their written words we linger o’er ; But in the sun they cast uo shade, No voice is heard, no sign is made. No step is on the conscious floor! Yet love will dream, and faith will trust, Since He who knows our need is just, That somehow, somewhere, meet we must. Alas ! for him who never sees The stars shine through his cypress trees ! Who, hopeless, lays his dead away, Nor looks to see the breaking day Across the mournful marble play! Who hath not learned in hours of faith, The truth to flesh and sense unknown. That Life is ever Lord of Death. And love can never lose its own! FAITH. If Faith came not to hold our hand How weary we should be, Wandering along the lonesome strand That bounds the “narrow sea,” While one by one our best beloved Pass o’er dear Lord, to thee ! She walks with us and holds our hand, Her eyes are angel’s eyes; She walks with us across the sand. Sweet Faith, from out the skies ! Wearing a rose upon her breast That smells of Paradise. (CoiHimmicationo. [For the Democrat.] VICE AND ITS CONSEQUENCES. img vitu RVOWAY’S sarsaparillian RESOLVENT i» •old at fl le t B -ttle, or 0 BottK* t r f >, by all Dr-.^isU end Medicfo.* I baler*, and at DR. U ADW AY'S Mvdiciut Warehovbe, S7 Maiden Lane. York City. At w L , r»T , r.''*T? AT«r»L h«>c Lpo** aoid, and a great deal more might be written, relative to the prevailing vice* which Uneaten to overwhelm our profligate youth—not only youths but alas! hoary age! Wc herewith submit our humble opinion on this important subject and request that you would furor it with a place iu the columns of your worthy journal. A grave subject it is, indeed, but how many of the aforesaid class, will regard it as such ? Very few, we fear. Could we by word or deed, dissuade the poor, deluded ercaturcs from the paths they are daily pur suing, our aid and counsel would cheerfully be extended in their behalf. This vast universe, in a social point, is made up of “many natures marvelously mix ed.” Of that number, many, alas too many, hug, as did the Egyptian Queen, the deadly Asp to their besoms, heedless of the result. Yet knowing that it will silently suck away their very life-blood. Hear me, will yon, friend? If you are too reckless, and have lost the chief adornment of the human char acter—Honot—then, never mind, a few words of ‘‘soberness and truth” will avail thee nothing. I trust there are none. God forbid th .ire should bo. Listen not to the enchanting strains of the beautiful syrens who would seduce thee !—Mr.mento mori! RememvvWhe little lesson of the Spider and the Fly. Their tongues are smooth and oily, 'iliey inhabit requestered places and shady groves with “verdant roof em bowered.” “’Tis tlicre the vales of pleasure lie.” and, often beside the babbling brook, which you would think a fit haunt for the gods.— One enslavement may prove a final ruin. • Their voices will sound sweeter than the sweetest music by which your soul has ever been enchained. “Crimson leaves the rose adorn. Hut beneath them lurks a thorn ; Fair aud flowery is the brake. Vet it hides the vengeful snake,” “Seek no more—the rest is vain j Pleasure ending coin in pain, Anguish tightly gilded o’er. Close thy wish and seek no more.” If you have erred, utter an interregnum of several months, perhaps years, you will rc- nli/:e your true status iu society, i. e in the circle in which you moved. Then, as a na tural sequence, you will be forced, reluctant ly, to acknowledge your position as not very enviable. And when the veil of delusion | has been removed from your eyes, bitter feel- t ings of rein rsc will occupy your thought* ; | anguish will be noticeable iu every feature; | and, ou looking, you will not behold, as of yore, the capricious deceptive fairy nymphs who revolt 1 in the sylvan retreats which you loved, at-.d did must frequent They remind tme of the scriptural admonition iu relation to Apollyon. wherein it says he goes ‘as a roaring lion. &c., and as greater inducements earth, their limpid waters irrigating other lands, and yon, weary and foct-sore—leagues from a happy home—will be an outcast on a desert of blackness and despair. Now, therefore, ye unfortunate, would ye possess a higher—a nobler station among your fellow.creatures? Then, turn away from the base allurements of those who would entice thee to join the gay and giddy throng who “trip the light fantastic toe/’ with grace and revel in the mazy dance, Do not infer from the foregoing that the vile dance houses of reeking pollution must, necessarily, bo classed with the gilded halls of wealth, (though they can be in a measure) where the bean monde assemble and choose saltatory exercise to while away their leis ure moments. Even the latter meets not the approval of all the church going people.— Else why is it there are so few who can say with pride they’re been serving the Devil in a ball-room ? As an illustration, the following brie? 1 but sad story will serve to show the folly of vice aud dopravity of mankind. The events trampired in my native city, several years sines. It was a chilly morning in December.— Maty hurried to and fro, animated by the braung air. But there were many sad hearts in the city. None, no not one, could have been more so than the principal charac ter and subject of this story. I was walking along the wharves. On one I saw a little girl who possessed a woe begone countenance. I asked her name. It was Hinnie. I then heard her mother’s name, and their mode of living. Her story wa.<*listened to with sorrow. Her father was Coimcl S , by whom our State was ably represented for a number of years in the U. S. Congreas. Ho was a States Rights advo cate and clear exponent of civil liberty, and mere than once did his heart-thrilling rhetor ic and soul-stirring eloquence cause those Halls to reverberate while battling in de fence of laws which were tho palladium of the liberties and political freedom which we then enjoyed. Where is he now ? Seek the silent tombs, among them you will find the remains of him who was once an ornament to society, one of the brightest stars in our political galaxy, and the pride of a State wlio loved to boast such sons. But alas! he soon fell a prey to the malig nant vice, and there he lies, with a miserable scroll to mark his restisg place, and none to do him reverence. The few who cherish uis memory vSl tell you the cause of his untimely end in these words :—Intemperance aud the dance-hcuse ! But to the story. Minnie told no her mother was at home, ill A reprobate broth er, made the third member of that wretched family. Why,you ask, can he not go-mt on errands for his zick mother ? He prefers his favorite brothels and gambling hells to the porfbrmance of filial duties. Hcarlless monster ! He suffered his weak little sister to walk, day after day, the wharves and streets in search of bits of wood and provis ions. Minnie, on tho morning in question, was trudging along under a heavy burden— a basket of chips, upon the top o.’ which lay a small tin bucket of provisions that some kind hearted one had given her, tnd which she was taking home fur her find mother Girls, the name of that noble iitth creature should ever bo cherished with admiration and laudations of praise be waller far and wiTe for her whose example is so vorthy of emulation. The next day I visited the niotler, with the hnp>e of relieving her wants. After a circuitous route, in an obscure pait of the city, I found her residence, or rather hovel. I rapped, and Minnie ushered me into a small apartment, it a corner of which, lay the widowed, heart-broken mother. She had uo bed, save a rale couch of straw, with | hut scant covering. My heart grew sick at the scene before tic. She manifested uo little surprise at uy appearance: because, since her husband’s downfall and death she had been almost cnt-rely forsaken by former sunshine friends, and associates. Her story was simply a corroboration of statements set forth by hundreds who had gone before her, experiencing the same sorrows and heart aches which 'lie jiow felt so keen. She be gan the voyage uflifefinder the most favora- agniu attempt to expatiate on the follies of vice, or eudeavor to extol the benefits and pleasures of Honor and Truth. May success. Mr. Editor, ever attend your efforts while battling with your Demo crat, in the noble cause it has espoused as an oxpxiuuder of right principles, and as a peoples paper, advocating, as it has ster done, the cause of justsce to all, in the revela tion of momentous facts to its readers, wheth er bright and pleasant, or dim aud disagree able. Again, to my reader I would say, if these admonitions, which I strove to render kind but impressive, have been carefully perused and profited by, then reward has crowned the labor of your friend PHILO. Darlington, S. C., May 23, 1870. Northern Negroes. Repairing the Waste* of War. It cannot fail to be a matter of gratifica tion to all classes of citizens who arc capable of entertaining generous emotions to know that the South is rapidly overcoming the wastes occasioned by the war. The strides thus have been made in this direction have no parallel iu any age or country. So grand indeed: have been these industrial achieve ments that the ancient and hereditary ene mies of the South are forced to award the people of that section repeated encomiums. The indomitable energy and pcrsevercnce which have characterized the efforts of the Southern people amidst political disabilities, surrounded by military satraps, cursed by the misrepresentations of Northern spies and carpetbag mendicants, outraged by the pres ence of a bluck-whito-and-tan soldiery, with legislation in the hands of cotton-field ne- groet, the judiciary prostituted to uphold in justice, rapine and murder, all backed by a Congress animated and controlled by a desire to oppress the people and retard the develop ment of their resources, present a spectacle which challenges the applause of all Chris- tendom. These people, so tried while pass ing through the furnace which Radical ma- lignity had hoped would cons.ime them, have rescued their plantations from the wilder ness, rebuilt their homes, gatheied up their scanty moans: have planted, reaped, and gathered into barns- until their success has not only placed them above want and de pendence but has given them wealth and commercial influence which are felt and ac knowledged in the great centres of t • i ^' 3 ^ ; noth hemispheres. The manufacturing in dustries of Englanda nd all Europe acknowl edge their debt of gratitude ; aud even in New England thousands are kept from star vation and are pensioners upon the uncou- quenible spirit which animates the people of the South. The cotton crop now iu prospect it is believed, will reach 3,000,000 bales; and this at 8100 per bale swells to the enor mous sum of 8300,000,000. Another crop is planted and a large area is under cultiva tion, and when the season arrives for the harvest home there are reasons for lelicviog a still larger sum will be set down to the credit of the South for the great staple, which the match of civilization and commerce will be more and more in demand. The New York Shipping list, iu contemplating the ability of the South to increase the national wealth, remarks that within “that section of our common country lie elements that are capable of producing unbounded w ealth ; and external conditions combine, as they rarely combine for any favored country, to send it rapidly to the front in point of prosperity and power. It not only enjoys the nionoply of a staple which is iu increasing demand throughout tl.e world, in tho form and fab ric, but has innumerable other elemetns, now partially dormant, that only needed to be fostered and encouraged to make them fruitful sources of wealth. It only remains for the South, with the aid of Northern and European capital, to construct railways, build factories, foundaries and mills, open new routes of commerce and improve old ones, import modern machinery, and devote such expenditures to these put poses in the regions mainly where cotton is grown, to revive tho drooping energies of the industrial and com mercial interests of the whole country; for it is impossible for one *ection to thrive and prosper without all beirg more or loss favora- Thc Northern Negroes, arc quicker than their Southern brothers to comprehend the new political situations produced by the fif teenth amendment, are already moving in behalf of a separate political organization in harmony wijh, but not of the Republican porter- They do not intend to be swallowed up as- & helpless atom, among the mass of Ropubiican voters, but aim to hold the bal- auoe of power between the two great con tending parties,, coquetting with either en tirely in their own interests. That this course is a wise one, as a. new political move- none can donbt. any mbro than they can the certainty of the example spreading through the South. As a natural result of enfran- chisemeiit it is useless to discuss it, as the natural and unavoidable antagonism of race produced thereby will produce new issues and complications; before which the present ones are but of pigmy importance. Progress. Gen fra i, Lonortref.t.—Tlie LaG range (Ga.) Reporter says: “When a man once starts down the declivity of ruin, he descends with great rapidity to the bottom. General Longstrcet once held a warm place in every Southern heart for his great bravery and .fighting qualities and devotion to the Con federate cause. In an evil hour he yielded to the temptation of Federal pap and be came a Radical, for which he was made an officer of the customs at New Orleans. But ho haslet himself down, down, to a lower depth of political degradation ! He has been appointed by the Radical Governor, Adju tant-General of tho State Militia. Every body knows what militia means, and can ap preciate too vividly the downfall and degra dation of General Longstrcet. A Prophecy Fnlflllng. The following language was used many years since, by that eminent statesman and pure patriot, Patrick Henry. No one gave it credence at that time, but stern reality now forces us to accept it ns a true prophecy which is now being fulfilled, as fast as the Radical rule gains strength to execute it. It seems that he had little faith in the perpetuity of a “Republican form of Govern ment,” Here ia an extract from one of his sperches to prove it: “In turn, as ha* happened in all othe. countries? the government will pass into the hands of.somo unscrupulous factions, bent on aggrandizing itself and its members at the expense of the country. * * They will rule your country with the sword. * * * Swarms of tax-gatherers will infest the whole land. * * * The fate of all other repub lics must be ours.” The Cincinnati Commercial and the Chi cago Tribune, speaking for the average com mon sense of the Northern people, cry a bait in the march of moral and ideal progress They think jnst as we think, that the negro has had enough. They don’t think ho de serves any more, or that he can profitably employ any more, until he has shown what he can do with what he has. He has had freedom suddenly thrust upon him in spite of himself. He has been made a citizen and a voter. His equality in tho State—before the courts and at the ballot-box—is assured. The sword, aided by sundry legislative enact ments done a deal for him inside of ten short years of revolutionary event. He may vote sit on juries, testify, practice law and physic ride in cars, and otherwise enjoy himself. All these pleasures and privileges have come to him without any effort on his part, and he is “favored among the peoples.” Like the sou of Kish, who went out iu search of asses and from a kingdom, Sambo has everywhere encountered, instead of wood to hew and water to draw, honors and endowments euougeh to turn, a head less woolly than his is. Why should he receive any more? But Mr. Suranersays he has only just got a glimpse of the paradise which ho deserves and which awaits him; and, whether he be satisfied, but must be stirred up, until “the nation is forced to take another step in ad- vanca.” This is the logic of the Fifticnth amend ment. That amendment was a forcible vio lation of an understood principle of local self- government and premature assault upon pub lic aontimeutmade through a specious promise that it would settle a vexed question which the country desired to be quit of. But wo see how it works. No sooner is it out of the way then the impracticables want to continue to progress. It is as was predicted- The Radicals pro pose to drive ahead. The Republicans desire to hold back. We shall see which is the better of tbe two. Thus far the Radicals have had no reason to distrust themselves, and are likely to go to work aa Vigorous as ever. Au Incident. A gentleman from a °G , , who I. '"a w • - - *>v*v*t SnuLcft Iturncd I’p by tho Thous and. At Big Island Township, Marion county, Ohio, on the farm of Alexander Campbell a great snake hunt recently occurred. The party was headed by Capt Jackson Brady, who led his gallant company down into the tall prairie grass, and surrounding a twenty- acre lot, set fire on the outer edge of the grass a 4 o’clock P. M. The grass burned well, tho flames rolling up ten feet high, and as the fire advanced, the snakes retreated into the centre, sometimes making desperate ef forts to spring through the flames, but the blaze being too heavy they were killed in the attempt. At 7.45 V. M., the ground was burned over, and Capt. Brady went over the field of carnage aul picked up the debris of the great army of snakes, and by actual count was found to be 13,083 snakes of all sizes. One black racer was nine feet four inches long aud seven inches in circumference; This may be con-idered a good day’s work for this neighborhood, as tho snakes had be come so bad that small children were afraid | to go to'sehool, and they oven attacked some ] adults, several having been bitten on their boots, and it had become a common thing for fifty or a hundred snakes to chase men women and children across the prairie. The milk snakes were constantly milking the cows, and thereby interfering with the diary business in that section. with his family thiw,,,^ the South Atlantic States, rciSHinn-u over" 1 . Charleston a day to witness Use ceremonies at magnolia Cemetery yesterday. He himself had been sorely stricken, for he bad lost a noble son during the war on the Federal side; but a broad humanity and Christian charity moved him to visit the modest graves of the. Confederate dead at Magnolia. He carried with him a beautiful bouquet, and deposited it across the tombstone of an “Unknown,” with a card bearing the following words, “A floral tribute to the ‘Unknown,’ from a Northern gentleman, May 10th, 1870.”— Charleston News. A Curious Legend. 3<»l» pepiurtmcnt. The above Departmeat will be promptly at tended to, and all work in this line executed om the most satisfactory terms. \! c will furnish short notice LA IF DLAfiKS, RAND BILLS, POSTERS, CIRCULARS, BUSINESS CARDS, WEDDING CARDS, BILL HEADS, pamphlets, LABELS, AH Job Work wifi bo Cams oa delivery. -jl _xa Attempted Unite. On Tuesday evening, about dark, as a Mrs. -—•—a respectable white woman, who is employed at Rose's Hotel, was on her way home, and when in tho vicinity of the old “Elmore House;” on Richland street, she was assaulted by a colored man, who robbed her of what little money she had, and at- tempted to outrage her. She screamed «nd resisted him, when a passing carriage fright ened the monster and he rau off. The poor woman, with her hair disheveled and gar ments torn, endeavored to attract the atten tion of tho inmate* of tho vehicle, (Gov, Scott and friends,) but the driver, it is sup posed, did not observe her, and drove off rapidly.— Columbia Phonix. Wet His Shirt.—A bashful and rather verdant young man from near Vincennes, attended a ball at that plaec, recently, in company with tho ‘idol of his heart,’ After the daueo had progressd for some time, the young man from the rural district saw the one most dear to him sitting alone in the corner of the room, and concluded he would step over and have a special chat with hia love. All well so far, but tho fellow waa at loss for something to say; he fidgeted about. •28.15S&. aud was sweating profusely, having tho dance, and besides the room was warm. Finally, taking hold of his collar, ho commenced the conversatio- It’s powerful warm; my shirt's yours?’ The lady wilted. Badly Sold.—At th ny’s sale of unopened p-acT-^. ;^. - bida by gentlemen eager^ tery. The beat known hardware merchants ing a box marked “Hon. L* (the defunct martyr,) they i" as to its contents, and find. dg-Ji Bll ponderous, concluded th., f ^t/-. tols or revolvers. • **pv> 5T.. X cd an extempora it in for box was medals of Giant & ^ ^ doubtless intended - | | jm We met b!e auspices, having'no trivial sorrows to mnr | My affected. When the South produces her pleasure, or rufle the bright soa over ! cotton enough to serve as the agent ofl’or- which she was so gcatly gliding; but, at | e ig„ exchange the commerce of the country length the horizon beerme overcast, a storm j w jn wa ] ;e tn new life, the ship-building intcr- HARLLEE & DARGAN, ATTORNEYS AT LAW. DARLINGTON, C. II., S. C. W. Vt. HARI-LEE, T. 0. HAROA.N. .March 23. 1670. arose, lashing the ship with all the fury of the tempest; and thus happiness was banish ed from that once cheerful home. Mrs. S recovered, but the bright rays of happiness that illumed her former home, as I have before said, hid gone as go the flowers in autumn, and sin was left, “weary aud old with service,” o “stitch, stitch, stitch,” from morn til uizht, for a scanty support. This brief story is akin to the histories which might be written of thousands : be cause. thcro are enough, if pheeo on reoerd, to fill volumes of both song aid story. Yet cst revive, trade beeom active and profitable our railroads aud canals be put to set vice, and gener-.il prossperity attest the welcome chagcn. If Northern journals, representing a peo ple to be largely benefited by the full devel opment of Southern industries and her power to benefit mankind, are in earnest and honest in what they publish, they will see to it that they send to Congress men who are capable of comproheudiug justice, who are statesmen as well as politicians, who are capable of comprehending the wants of the country aud A Ileautifiil Night. of rising above sectional jealousies. \\ hen they select the coolest and most pleasant | there are multitudes who still persist in go-■ this is done then and not till then, will this places. Visit again, and yon will discover | iug ou to ruin, “straightway as an ox gc- I florid rhetoric about the South, Southern that they are like the wandering butter-‘V, j eth to the slaughter, ora bird iasteth to the \ recuperation, etc ,'bc credited with any seoti- and will have sought more lucrative places ; sna.'e.” ! |m , Qt l)lore Mevated than to share in the in a more congenial clime. The pebbly beds | Now, my reader, if you will not say that , loaves and fishes which Southern enterprise of those bubbling brooks wi!! be at parched j I am right iomy views, then I wi!! never [ p reduces. Conner Je.wncl. Lcuisidle, Ky 'When Burk wasayoung Queen of France, at Versailles who was just budding into womanhood and entering upon tho gay and fashonablc life of the French metropolis, bo .heir { K , gt | spoke of her as “glitteriug like the morning star full of life an i splendor and joy.” He saw her “just above the horizon, decorating and cheering the elevated sphere she had just begun to move in,” and declared her “the most delightful vision that ever light ed ou this orb.” If that grt.-it man could have cast bis eye over the scene, at the Confederate Cemetery vc-terday, and witnessed th ‘ hundreds of the “queens of the South,” decorating the graves of the fallen brave, who dh-d for them, he could afterwards have contemplated the vision of the little queen of France without extra ordinary emotion, A'irtue, beauty and in nocence, making their votive offering of flow ers and tears to valor overpowered, was a sight on which the angels might look with complacfney — .Yf.y.i When Adam was far advanced in years and at the point of death he sent his son to the angel Michael, who kept tho the gate of Paridisc, to pray for the oil of mercy, so that he could be beard The angel answered that it could- cot be until fifty-five hundred years but be gave Seth a branch of the tree of Vhich Adam had eaten, bidding him plant it on Mount Lebanon, and that when it bore fruit his father should be healed. 8eth planted the branch on his fathers grave; it took root and grew, and from it were made Aron’s rod that sweetened the waters of Marah. It also formed the pole on which the brazen serpent was lifted up, and th* ark of the testimony. At last it came into the hands of Solomon, who used it in build ing his palace; but it continually resisted the effortof the builders to adjust it. Now it was too long, and then too short. The builders being angry, they threw it into a mash, so that it might serve as abridge. Thequccu of Sheba would not walk upon it, but adored it, and told Solomon that upon it should be suspended the man through whose death the kingdom should bo destroyed, fc’olomen then burid it deep in the ground, where after wards the pool of Bclhfbd.i was dug, and from the virtues of this tree healing propo r ties were im parted to the waters. After it had been buried :hree hundred years it rose to the surface of the water, and the Jews took :t at.d made of it the cross of our Saviour.— L’ppi neott's Magazine, vV • . TT’WEi-M. £1 v $- v- ' / ■ .'"••• • raid,) ar.d withoSJgj*' jS our name, he cxclaimear‘ Vv. (). ‘You just ortcr been d»irn to tho rivei while ago!’ •Why?’ wc inquired." ‘Because, a nigger was in therQ.i and a big cat-fish came up behind him. swallowed both his feet and went swinging along on top of tbe water with him, andlhey earns up behind another big, fish and the nig ger swallowed his tail, and the nigger and the two fish went swimming about.' ‘Well, then what?’ we asked. ‘Why, after a while the nigger swallowed r hia fish, and the other fish swollowed the nigger, and that’s the last I saw of either of them.’ ‘Sonny, said we, with feelings of alarm for the boy, “you are in a fair to become the editor of a Radical paper, »sd we loft hiss. . y-—— . ■< An Irishman attended a Quaker meeting heard a young friend make the following announcement: ‘Brethren an£ sister*, I am going to marry a daughter the Lord.’ ‘The devil yo are,’ said Pafe’ ‘faith and be jubers and it will be a long time before ye’ll sec yer father-in-law{* Jfl sfyj*p ■ ■ ipL !*, SjOP dsE- ilfeF* ** - --■‘iSePita ■ ¥ Tho following lines were tsiken from a young lady’s hymn book, a lew days ago, which she thoughtlessly left in church: “I look in vain—he does not come; Dear, dear, what shall I do ? I cannot listen as I ought. Unless he listens too. He might have come as well ns not; What plagues these fellows are! 111 bet lift’s fast asleep at home* Or smoking a cigar.” 4 I dm nfry, dear wife, that while I ^ gone absence wilF«mqder love.’ ‘O, oeve.’ fear, dear husband; ths-Jortger you stay away the better I ahull like you.’ A lady at Montezuma, Iowa has the small est child ou itcord. It ia two weeks old, and weighs only two pounds Still it is perfectly heathy. - Here is the pihiotl sermon ever probed : “Our ingress in ilk is -viaied anti aaro ; our progress throup* life is trouble aud care; our es.’ress out f life wc kuuw not where ; but, doing well ere, wc shall do well there.” The Post-'^er-goneral says if tho hill abolishing the ranking privileges ia paned, he will he ablcto reduce letter poatagA wom three to two e.its per half ounce. General 1 omas Jordan hee addresssed an appeal to t’e Lidice of the city of New York iu beha’ of the wretched and almost naked women tnd children of Cubs. He asks for cloth >g, even the remnants t.rfown aside in the sores; which will be rectawed with gratitud: by all, ar.d even by many once used to» fine moot and luxury. Oao the dtf following the receipt of tho news of tbaj-iebr-onl d^^tcr, a sharp thief .... . a.-(I.;,.; aavA "4 8© Jt 5 -‘ v